Brits hate their mobile photos!

You know how it is, you spend ages lining up that special shot on your phone to get the perfect photo, and something goes wrong.

A gust of wind knocking you off balance, a pet jumping in to get in on the action or just the plain old not liking anything you happen to take on a certain day, anything can ruin that memory.

Huawei have studied feedback from over 2000 people and have reported that brits hate around 75% of the photos they take on their phones.

The results below are rather interesting and prove you are not alone when you secretly ‘borrow’ a friends phone to delete that horrible moment in time they could use against you on social media.

Of course, it is no accident this report comes out just before Huawei plan to announce their latest range of camera focused smartphones on the 27th March, the Huawei P20, P20 Lite and P20 Pro are expected to take mobile photography to a new level with impressive sensors, AI and software to capture a moment, every time

BRITS HATE 75% OF THE PHOTOS TAKEN ON THEIR SMARTPHONE
ACCORDING TO RESEARCH FROM HUAWEI

New research out today from Huawei has revealed the extent to which modern Brits have become a nation of “picture perfectionists,” with the average Brit having a staggering 783 pictures saved on their smartphone, but only truly liking 25% of them.

The study of over 2,000 Brits found that looking bad in a photo tops the list of reasons why people don’t like the photos stored on their phone, while poor lighting and blurry images are also responsible for the ‘photo clutter’ in smartphone galleries across the UK:

Top five reasons we don’t like the photos on our smartphones:

I don’t look good (47%)

Bad lighting (40%)

Blurry (33%)

Out of focus (32%)

Not being able to get the right shot (29%)

Huawei commissioned the research to discover the photography frustrations smartphone users have with their devices, with poor low light photography, blurry action shots and poor zoom quality all featuring in the list of gripes.

The research revealed that Brits only end up using 34% of the shots they take at any one time, and once taking a shot they like, will spend 4 minutes and 30 seconds on average to edit, crop and add a filter to the image before posting it on social media.

“With smartphones always by our side, it’s become easier than ever to take a photo and instantly share it with our friends and family. But in the era of social media, the quest for posting a perfect photo means many will take several shots before capturing one they are truly happy with,” said Justin Costello, Head of Marketing for Huawei UK & Ireland. “At Huawei we are leading a renaissance in photography. The new P20, which launches on the 27th of March, will make it easier than ever to capture the perfect photo, everytime.”

The Selfish Cull

More than one in ten women (15%) have secretly gone into a friend or partner’s phone to delete a picture of themselves that they did not like

68% of men and 81% of women immediately delete a picture if they feel they do not look their best in it

49% of Brits have deleted a great picture of their family or friends, simply because they didn’t look good in it themselves

Second-rate selfies

Just 17% of people in Liverpool like the way they look in the pictures stored on their phone

The “selfie” is losing popularity among modern Brits, with only 22% saying selfies were the shots they take the most on their phones. When it comes to what we snap the most – 66% take the most pictures of their family, while almost half (46%) prefer taking pictures of nature and 38% enjoy taking images with their friends the most

People in Birmingham are the biggest ‘photo critics’, and have to take more snaps than anywhere else in the UK to get a shot they are happy with

Photo Fiends

20% of Brits have had a row with a partner or friend over whether or not a photo should be deleted permanently from social media

16% of women and 10% of men have actively posted a picture online in which a friend looked terrible, because they looked good in it themselves

When the shoe is on the other foot, it appears the nation aren’t so generous – with 14 percent of women and 10 percent of men confessing they have kept a photo on their phone that they look great in, despite a friend having asked for it be deleted.